Flint v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

207 S.W.2d 474, 357 Mo. 215, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 702
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 8, 1947
DocketNo. 40282.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 207 S.W.2d 474 (Flint v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 207 S.W.2d 474, 357 Mo. 215, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 702 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

HYDE, J.

[475] This is an action for damages for the death of plaintiff’s 13 year old son. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for $8000.00 and defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff’s son, Charles W. Flint, was killed on August 14, 1945 when a truck in which he was riding was struck by defendant’s passenger train at a crossing a mile and a half east of Clark in Randolph County. The ease was submitted on primary negligence of failure to give timely and adequate warning and on humanitarian negligence of failure to stop or slacken speed. Defendant contends that plaintiff’s evidence was insufficient to make a case for the jury on either theory, and that it was entitled to a directed verdict. Defendant also alleges error in giving the two instructions', separately submitting each of these charges of negligence, contending that neither was supported by the evidence.

Charles lived in Bartlesville, Oklahoma and was in the eighth grade in Junior High School there. He was a bright, intelligent boy with an unusual I. Q., a good mind, and quick to understand. He was 13 years old and about 4 feet 6 inches tall. He had traveled in various parts of the United States with his parents and “had been around enough to take care of himself.” He understood the danger of being on a railroad track. He was visiting his aunt, Mrs. Truesdell, in Clark in August 1945. He had visited there during the last four summers, at first with his parents, but had come from Kansas in a car *222 with an older cousin the previous summer. That summer he came on the train and had been there for about a week before the casualty. Mr. Truesdell and his brother had a feed and produce store in Clark; Charles frequently stayed at the store and became interested in threshing going on near Clark on land owned by the Truesdells, to which they were sending their truck driven by Donald Cable. Charles went there with Cable on this truck two days before, driving over the private crossing where the casualty occurred; and had been on many other trips in this truck. He had not yet learned to drive a ear.

The threshing was being done north of the railroad which ran almost due _ northwest for more than half a mile on each side of the crossing. There was a lane through the field, used by persons who farmed the land north of the railroad. This lane crossed the railroad about 1000 feet north of the public gravel road. The railroad had a right-of-way of 100 feet and there was a corner post 50 feet south of the center of the track. The right-of-way was fenced to the northwest of this post but not to the southeast, and in this direction it was covered with high weeds. The lane made a short S curve around this corner post to the track, curving first to the left (west) and then back to the right to the incline which took it over the track. [476] The track was on an embankment about four feet above the fields which were level and flat. The day of the casualty was clear and the lane was dry. Plaintiff had a survey made which showed that the crossing was 4 1/2 feet higher than the lane at the corner post (although in testifying this surveyor said 3.7 feet); while between the corner post and the beginning of the incline to the crossing (which began about 25 feet from the crossing) the low point in the lane was about one foot lower than at the corner post. Plaintiff’s surveyor made tests to see if a person standing at the low point of the lane could see down the track and said he could see about 200 feet. He estimated that standing in the road north of the corner post he could see an engine 600 or 700 feet. He also said he could see the erossarms on nine telegraph poles from this point. Defendant had evidence of a surveyor to show that, with a solid obstruction six feet high, ten feet from the lane, at least 3 feet, 6 inches of the engine (the s,moke stack of which was 15 feet, 2 inches high) could have been seen 530 feet east of the crossing from the low point in the lane.

At the time of the casualty most of the weeds were five or six feet high, between the right-of-way line (at the corner post) and the railroad embankment, although some weeds were much higher than the rest. These weeds came within 8 or 10 feet (cut back two swaths) of the east side of the roadway. Plaintiff’s pictures taken the next day with the camera at a height of 4 feet' 6 inches show that these high weeds extended to the embankment with shorter weeds on the embankment. Some of plaintiff’s evidence indicated that when sitting in the truck the boy’s eyes would have been about five feet above the *223 ground. Defendant’s evidence was that tbe bottom sill of tbe truck window was 57 inches above tbe ground. These pictures also show at least three telegraph poles (130 feet apart) on the north side of the embankment clearly visible through the higher weeds, showing the two erossarms on each, and the rails could be seen beyond, the first one east of the crossing. The pictures show much foliage on these weeds and that they had grown up thickly so that one could not see through them at the 4 1/2 foot level. One of plaintiff’s witnesses said the weeds were higher than his head, standing on the railroad track, but the pictures do not substantiate this except' perhaps in the case of a few weeds much taller than the rest.

Plaintiff offered the testimony (depositions) of the engineer and fireman which showed that the train was running at a speed of between 33 and 39 miles per hour; that braking in emergency the train could have been stopped in about 500 feet; and that it was stopped about 600 feet beyond the crossing, the brakes being put on after the engine hit the truck. The rated (time-table) speed was 50 miles per hour but they had slowed approaching the signal at Clark where they often had to stop at the Wabash crossing. The fireman was on the south side of the engine and saw the truck approaching; the engineer on the other side could not see it. The fireman said when he first saw the truck “it was about where the road curves before it makes a curve to come up on the track.” (Near the corner post.) He said that the engine was then about 200 or 250 yards east of the crossing and the truck about 15'or 20 yards south. He said: “When I saw the truck I turned to call the engineer’s attention to a truck coming, just as he got hold of the whistle to blow it, and I didn’t say nothing then,.be impossible to make him hear — couldn’t stop anyway.” He said that just as he turned the engineer blew the whistle and kept it blowing (two longs and two shorts) until they reached the crossing. The engineer said he whistled because he saw men in the field north of the track and because he made a practice of whistling for private crossings.

The fireman said that the truck slackened speed 20 or 30 feet south of the crossing, “stopped or almost stopped”, and then moved forward at accelerated speed, “just like you would put a-truck or car in low gear and step on the gas.” He said the truck hit the pilot beam of the engine, right back of the radiator of the truck, and was swung around against the side of the engine.

Cable, the driver of the truck, who was also plaintiff’s witness, gave similar testimony as to its movements. He said that [477] when he reached the corner post he was not going over- five miles an hour; that he almost stopped to change to a lower gear as the front end of the truck “was just ready to start up the incline for the crossing” about 20 or 25 feet' from the south rail; and that he drove up the incline about 4 or 5 miles per hour.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W.2d 474, 357 Mo. 215, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-mo-1947.